| Literature DB >> 22135768 |
Abstract
Background. The aim of this study was to show the importance of the bone marker procollagen type 1 aminoterminal propeptide (P1NP) in detecting bone metastases in women suffering from breast cancer. We furthermore investigated to what degree P1NP is correlated to the degree of bone metastases, and if P1NP is increased in patients with metastases other than bone. Patients and Methods. We analyzed 80 serum samples of women (17 premenopausal/63 postmenopausal) with breast cancer. Therefore we used a specific immunoassay "ELECSYS 2010" by Roche Diagnostics. We divided our group of patients with regard to menopausal status, sites of metastases and number of bone metastases. Results. As a result we found higher concentrations of P1NP in women with radiologically confirmed bone metastases (median: 125.75 ng/mL) in comparison to the collective without bone involvement (median: 73.61 ng/mL). However, both groups showed values above the applied cutoff values of median 27.8 ng/mL for premenopausal women and median: 37.1 ng/mL for the postmenopausal group due to the fact that all patients had cancer. Furthermore higher P1NP concentrations were found in women with more than 5 sites of bone metastases (median: 183.9 ng/mL) than in patients with only one site of bone metastases (median: 37 ng/mL). Also patients with no bone involvement but other sites of metastases showed quite high P1NP concentrations (median: 73.61 ng/mL). Conclusion. The marker of bone turnover procollagen type 1 aminoterminal propeptide can be considered as a useful tool for estimating the extent of bone involvement and for the detection of bone metastases. P1NP cannot replace conventional methods for detecting bone metastases such as radiological methods but it can help clarify unclear radiological results. This study does not take into account the change of P1NP concentration during the course of therapy.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22135768 PMCID: PMC3216355 DOI: 10.4061/2011/853484
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patholog Res Int ISSN: 2042-003X
P1NP in women with breast cancer without (NMS) and with skeletal metastases (MS).
| NMS | MS | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 18 | 62 |
| Median P1NP | 73.61 ng/mL | 125.75 ng/mL |
| Minimum P1NP | 13.99 ng/mL | 14.7 ng/mL |
| Maximum P1NP | 243 ng/mL | 981.6 ng/mL |
Figure 1ROC analyses for P1NP.
Correlation between P1NP levels and extent of bone metastases.
| Number of sites of skeletal metastases | 1 | >1 <5 | 5 | >5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median: P1NP ng/mL | 37.1 | 50.62 | 52.79 | 183.7 |
| Minimum: P1NP ng/mL | 28.22 | 14.7 | 49.55 | 19.75 |
| Maximum: P1NP ng/mL | 45.89 | 163.5 | 156.0 | 981.6 |
P1NP serum levels depending on different sites of metastases.
| Site of metastases | Exclusively skeletal | Exclusively visceral | Skeletal and visceral |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median: P1NP l | 52.79 ng/mL | 73.6 ng/mL | 162.75 ng/mL |
| Minimum: P1NP | 14.8 ng/mL | 16.3 ng/mL | 22.47 ng/mL |
| Maximum: P1NP | 561.1 ng/mL | 243.5 ng/mL | 981.6 ng/mL |